Authors: Lorine Niedecker
I'll find this kind of thing
tho it does sing.
Let's take it in
I said so grandmother can see
but she could not
it changed to brown
and town
changed us, too.
TRADITION
I
The chemist creates
the brazen
approximation:
Life
Thy will be done
Sun
II
Time to garden
before I
die—
to meet
my compost maker
the caretaker
of the cemetery
Autumn Night
Lisp and wisp
of dry leaves
“Put me wise
to what a tree toad is”
Boy
whose little son
now walks
“Starless night”
brings to mind the stars
those glimmering talks
Sky
in my favor
to fly
to downtown crowds
home
and Bash
on my mind
Nothing to speak of
on the bus ride
—a cleaned-up route—
till the courthouse—
on that grey structure the noise
of a thousand raspy wires—
sparrows!
By what law do the chirp-screech
“sparrow folk” go screwy
the late daylight hours
of fall?
Swedenborg
Well he saw man created according
to the motion of the elements. He located
the soul: in the blood. Retired
at last—to a house where he paid
window-tax (for increasing the light!).
Lived simply. Gardened. Saw visions.
Nothing for supper but tea.
Now he saw the soul from his “Pray,
what is matter” leave for the touchy
—heavens!—blue rose kind of thing.
Strange—he did grow a blue rose,
you know.
I lost you to water, summer
when the young girls swim,
to the hot shore
to little peet-tweet-
pert girls.
Now it's cold your bright knock
—Orion's with his dog after him—
at my door, boy
on a winter
wave ride.
I married
in the world's black night
for warmth
if not repose.
At the close—
someone.
I hid with him
from the long range guns.
We lay leg
in the cupboard, head
in closet.
A slit of light
at no bird dawn—
Untaught
I thought
he drank
too much.
I say
I married
and lived unburied.
I thought—
You see here
the influence
of inference
Moon on rippled
stream
“Except as
and unless”
Your erudition
the elegant flower
of which
my blue chicory
at scrub end
of campus ditch
illuminates